Sydney yields are 2.5%.
Bali yields are 17%.
Same timezone. 6-hour flight. Here's the math.
You already know the Australian market is cooked.
Median house in Sydney? $1.4 million. Rental yield? 2.5%. Maybe 3% if you're lucky.
Melbourne's not much better. Brisbane's catching up to the insanity. Perth had its moment — gone now.
You've done the math a hundred times. Buy a $900K investment property, get $25K gross rent, pay $15K in costs, end up with... what? $10K? That's barely 1% net.
Meanwhile you're competing with 47 other buyers at every auction. Getting outbid by $200K. Watching your deposit shrink against rising prices.
You've thought about going regional. Geelong. Gold Coast. Adelaide.
But then the doubts:
  • "Foreigners can't own land — it's all dodgy leasehold stuff."
  • "How do I know the builder won't just disappear with my money?"
  • "Managing a property from Sydney? Yeah, right."
Fair concerns. Every Aussie investor I've talked to had the same ones.
Let me show you one number that shut them all up.
Same story, smaller numbers. Still overpriced. Still underwhelming yields.
So you started looking at Bali.
You've been there — what, three times? Four? You know the vibe. You've seen the construction boom. You've heard the whispers at barbecues: "Mate, my cousin bought a villa there, making a killing."
Our worst-case scenario is 10% annual returns. In USD.
Let that sink in.
When everything goes pear-shaped — GFC 2.0, borders slam shut, tourism collapses — we slash rates to $104 per night. That's $26 per person. Backpacker prices for an apartment with three pools, spa, and Melasti Beach five minutes away.
Even then: 10% returns. In US dollars. Straight to your Australian bank account.
Now let's compare:
Your "safe" Melbourne apartment? 2.8% yield — before strata, before repairs, before the tenant trashes the place.
That Sunshine Coast unit you looked at? 4% gross. 2% net after management fees and council rates.
Your super fund? Could be up. Could be down. You won't know until you're 60.
Here's what gets me: Aussie investors accept 2-3% yields as "normal" — then call 10-20% in Bali "too good to be true."
Our floor is higher than their ceiling.
And when things go well? 17-20% annually.
That's $30,000-40,000 AUD per year from a single apartment. While you're at work in Sydney. While it's winter here and perfect over there.
How is this possible from a 6-hour flight away?
Two things. Dead simple. Right in front of everyone’s face. Yet somehow no other developer on the island figured them out.
First: the apartments fit 4 guests, not 2. Family from Jakarta pays $ 180 total — that’s $ 45 per head. They’d pay $ 300+ for two hotel rooms. We’re cheaper AND better. Double the revenue per unit.
Second: the apartment pays 9% of its own purchase price. From rental income it generates. Before you even finish paying. I’ll show you exactly how.
Together they create numbers that make Australian property look like a savings account.
But let's deal with the three things keeping you up at night:
"It's leasehold, not freehold — that's not real ownership."
Look, I get it. Australians love freehold. It’s cultural. But here’s reality: you get 30-year Hak Pakai, renewable for another 30. That’s 60 years of legal, protected ownership. Your name on notarized documents. You can sell anytime. Your kids can inherit it. Try getting 17% yield from any freehold in Sydney — doesn’t exist.
"How do I manage it from Australia?"
You don’t. Full stop. Professional management company runs everything — same people who launched Ritz-Carlton across Asia. They handle bookings, guests, cleaning, maintenance, taxes. You get quarterly reports and AUD transfers. Check your phone once every three months. Done.
"What if the developer's dodgy?"
We’ve been building for 18 years. 1.2 million square metres delivered. $ 3.8 million of our own money already in the ground. 57 investors from Sydney, Melbourne, Dubai, Berlin — all verified the documents, visited the site, found zero issues. Live cameras on construction 24/7. Come see it yourself — we’ll cover your flights if you’re not convinced.
Here's what Europeans don't have: proximity.
Bali is YOUR backyard. Same timezone as Perth. 6 hours from Sydney. Cheaper than flying to Cairns.
You can actually visit your investment. Bring the family for school holidays. Check on things yourself if you want to.
Try doing that with a "high-yield" property in Portugal or Florida.
Plus: when it's freezing in Melbourne, it's 30°C in Bali. Your apartment fills up with Aussies escaping winter. June-July-August? Highest season. Because of YOU — Australian tourists.
You're not just investing in Bali. You're investing in Australian travel patterns.
Now let me show you what you're actually buying.
Not a timeshare. Not a "fractional ownership" scheme. Not some crypto token pretending to be real estate.
An actual apartment. Concrete and glass. Already going up. You can watch the construction live right now.
Picture this:
It’s July. Melbourne winter. You’re at the office, heating cranked, grey sky outside.
Phone buzzes. "A$ 7,200 deposited. Q2 rental income — Habbi Bali."
That's your apartment working. Filled with Brisbane families escaping the cold. While you were stuck in meetings.
Same thing happens in October. January. April. For 27 years.
That's the machine you're buying.
Let me show you exactly how it works.
You've played the Australian property game. Let's talk about what it's become.
You're not a beginner. You've probably got one investment property already. Maybe two. You understand negative gearing, depreciation schedules, capital growth versus yield.
You've made money in Australian property. Maybe good money.
But lately, the numbers have stopped making sense.
Let me walk through what you already know — but maybe haven't said out loud.
SYDNEY: The market that broke the model.
Median house price: $1.4 million.
Median unit price: $850,000.
Average rental yield: 2.5%.
Let's run it.
$850,000 unit in a decent suburb. Maybe Parramatta. Maybe Hurstville.
Rent: $650/week.
That's $33,800/year gross.
Yield: 3.9% gross.
Now subtract:
  • Strata: $4,000-6,000/year
  • Council rates: $1,500/year
  • Water rates: $700/year
  • Property management (8%): $2,700/year
  • Insurance: $1,500/year
  • Maintenance allowance: $2,000/year
  • Land tax (if you're over threshold): $3,000+/year
Net income: $17,000-19,000/year.
Net yield: 2-2.2%.
And that's before vacancy. Before the tenant who stops paying. Before the special levy when the building needs new lifts.
Two percent. For $850,000 locked up. In a market everyone says is "due for a correction."
You're not investing. You're donating to someone else's housing.
MELBOURNE: "More affordable" — but is it?
Median house: $940,000.
Median unit: $615,000.
Average rental yield: 3.1%.
Better than Sydney. Still rubbish.
$615,000 unit in Brunswick or Footscray. Let's be optimistic — $550/week rent.
Gross yield: 4.6%. Looks okay on paper.
But Melbourne has a secret: oversupply.
All those apartment towers in Docklands, Southbank, CBD. Thousands of units. All competing for the same renters. When vacancy hits, rents drop fast.
I've talked to Melbourne investors who dropped rent three times in one year just to keep someone in the property. Negative cash flow for 18 months straight.
And the capital growth story? Melbourne prices are still below 2022 peak in real terms. You're not riding a wave. You're treading water.
BRISBANE: "The next Sydney" — they've been saying that for 20 years.
Post-Olympics hype pushed prices up 40% in three years. Everyone piled in.
Now what?
Median house: $850,000.
Median unit: $540,000.
Yields: 4-4.5%.
Better than Sydney and Melbourne. But here's the problem: everyone else figured that out too.
Investor activity in Brisbane hit record levels in 2023-2024. You're not early. You're competing with every other Aussie who read the same "Brisbane is undervalued" article.
And those yields? Already compressing. As prices rose, yields dropped. The arbitrage is closing.
Plus: Brisbane has flood zones, insurance premiums going through the roof, and infrastructure that's still catching up to population growth.
PERTH: The mining boom hangover.
Perth crashed after the 2014 mining bust. Prices dropped 20-30%. Smart money bought in 2019-2020.
If you bought then — congratulations. You did well.
If you're buying now? You're late to that party too.
Median house: $750,000 (up 60% from 2020).
Yields: 4-5% (down from 6-7% in 2020).
Perth is a one-industry town. Iron ore goes down, rents go down, prices go down. You’re not investing in property. You’re betting on Chinese steel demand.
And even at 4-5% yields — still half of what Bali offers in the worst case.
REGIONAL AUSTRALIA: "Go regional for better yields."
The latest advice from every property podcast.
And it’s not wrong. Regional yields are better. 5−6% in Geelong. 6−7% in Ballarat. Maybe 7−8% in mining towns.
But:
Regional markets are thin. One employer closes — vacancy spikes, prices crash. You can't sell when you need to.
Capital growth is inconsistent. Some regional towns grew 50% post-COVID. Some went backwards. Hard to pick winners.
Tenant quality varies. Good luck finding a property manager in a town of 15,000 people who actually returns your calls.
And the lifestyle? You own a property in a place you never want to visit. For maybe 2−3% better yield than Sydney.
Congratulations. You traded liquidity and capital growth potential for slightly better cash flow in a town you can't point to on a map.
THE AUSTRALIAN PROBLEM: It's not about finding the right suburb. The whole equation changed.
Let's zoom out.
Australian property worked for 30 years because:
  • Population growth (immigration) created demand
  • Interest rates kept falling (made borrowing cheaper)
  • Negative gearing and CGT discount made losing money tax-efficient
  • Capital growth covered weak yields
That model is cracking.
Interest rates? Up. And staying up.
Immigration? Being questioned politically.
Negative gearing? Likely to be reformed by whoever wins next election.
CGT discount? Same.
Capital growth? Already happened. Prices are at historic highs relative to income.
You're buying at the top of a 30-year cycle. With regulatory changes coming. And yields that don't even cover your mortgage.
The old playbook is broken.
THE YIELD COMPARISON: Same $200,000. Two different universes.
You have $200,000 to deploy.
Option A: Australian property
  • Deposit on $800,000 Melbourne apartment
  • Mortgage: $600,000 at 6.5% = $39,000/year interest
  • Rent: $30,000/year
  • Cash flow: negative $15,000-20,000/year (after all costs)
  • Hope: capital growth bails you out in 10 years
  • Risk: rates rise, prices fall, you're underwater
Option B: Bali
  • Buy apartment outright ($130,000 USD ≈ $200,000 AUD)
  • No mortgage
  • Net income: $15,000-21,000 USD/year ($23,000-32,000 AUD)
  • Cash flow: positive from day one
  • ROI: 12-17% annually
  • Risk: worst case is 10% yield (still 4x Australian yields)
Australian property: pay $15,000/year to own.
Bali property: get paid $25,000/year to own.
That's not a comparison. That's a different sport.
WHAT AUSTRALIAN INVESTORS WHO BOUGHT TELL US: "I have three properties in Australia. This one in Bali outperforms all of them combined."
James, 44, Sydney — finance director:
"I've got a unit in Parramatta, a house in Newcastle, and a townhouse in Brisbane. Total equity: $1.2 million. Total cash flow: negative $8,000/year. My one Bali apartment cost $200K AUD and nets me $28,000/year. I should have done this ten years ago."
Michelle, 51, Melbourne — business owner:
"Melbourne property made me comfortable. But I was working for the property, not the other way around. Every rent review was a fight. Every repair was a drama. Bali? I check my account once a quarter. Money appears. That’s it."
Steve, 38, Perth — mining engineer:
"I bought in Perth during the boom. Lost 25% by 2019. Held on, recovered by 2024. Fifteen years of stress for 3% yield. My Bali apartment took three months to research and delivers 15% while I sleep. I felt stupid for not doing this sooner."
THE REAL QUESTION: If Australian property is working, why are you still looking?
You wouldn't be reading this if your portfolio was performing.
You know the yields are trash. You know you're relying on capital growth that may or may not happen. You know the tax benefits are propping up a fundamentally weak investment.
And you know that Bali is 6 hours away. Same timezone as Perth. Cheaper than flying to Cairns.
This isn't some exotic gamble on the other side of the world.
This is your backyard. With 4-6x the returns.
The question isn't "is Bali risky?"
The question is: "Can I afford another decade of Australian yields while my mates who bought in Bali are retired at 55?"
TRANSITION: You’ve done well in Australian property. But the game changed.
What worked in 2005 doesn't work in 2025.
Now let me show you what real returns look like — specific numbers, specific scenarios, and why your worst case in Bali beats your best case in Australia.
You bought this apartment for income. But the first thing you’ll feel is when your wife says: "Let's stay another month."
Saturday, ten in the morning. You open your eyes. Silence.
This is why you invested.
Your wife steps onto the balcony. Stands beside you. Looks at the ocean and says: "Maybe next time we come for a month?"
Here — it's yours. Your kitchen. Your balcony. Your view. Come whenever you want. Don't come — and the apartment works and earns.
In a hotel, you're a guest. Paying $300 a night and still putting up with: neighbors through the wall, breakfast lines, a maid who moved your stuff.
You stand there with your coffee. Looking at all of it. And you feel the difference.
You grab your cup and step onto the balcony. Palm trees below, pool beyond. Ocean in the distance — you can hear the waves, but it's not so close that humidity destroys all your electronics in a year.
Your wife is in the kitchen. A real kitchen — stove, oven, full-size fridge. Brewing coffee in a Turkish pot, slicing mango from the market. Not that sad corner with a kettle that hotels call a "kitchenette." A real kitchen where you can actually cook.
You slept until ten. With kids. On vacation. When was the last time that happened?
No maid shouting "Housekeeping!" at eight. No kids climbing on your head — they’re sleeping in the living room behind a closed door. On a proper sofa, not a $ 30 cot that squeaks all night.
You're not a guest — you're the owner. Everything works differently here.
You go downstairs when you want. Not by 10:00 before the buffet closes. Not rushing with kids to the elevator because breakfast "ends in 15 minutes." When you wake up — that’s when you go down.
You're at the gym. Two floors, proper equipment, not three treadmills for the whole hotel. Cardio zone, free weights. You lift, then twenty minutes in the pool. After that — the coworking space. Good internet, quiet, proper desks. You answer urgent messages, close the laptop.
She goes to the women’s pool. Separate. No strange looks, no worrying about what she’s wearing. She swims, relaxes. Then — to the spa. 250 square meters. Balinese massage, scrubs, wraps. Two hours later — she’s a different person. You’ll see it in her eyes.
Your wife is free. For the first time this whole vacation.
After breakfast, your wife takes the kids to the children’s center. 350 square meters. Caregivers, play zones, cameras everywhere. Your daughter finds a friend in five minutes — they’re drawing together. Your son is glued to the building blocks. They don’t want to leave.
Because this isn’t a hotel where you’re one of 300 guests. This is your complex. The restaurant works for you, not the other way around.
No one rushes you. No one clears your plate while you’re still eating. No one watching the clock.
You walk into the restaurant. Table with a courtyard view — empty. Your daughter wants pancakes. Son wants something with chocolate. Wife orders an acai bowl with fruit. You — eggs and strong coffee.
The lobby — bright, spacious, quiet. Security 24/7. No crowd with suitcases at reception, no check-in line.
By lunch, everyone meets up. Kids played themselves out. Wife is glowing after the spa. You exercised and cleared your work backlog.
Light lunch at the restaurant. Healthy food — the complex runs on a wellness concept. No alcohol in common areas, no loud drunk crowds by the pool.
Everyone's happy. Everyone got what they needed. And it's only noon.
Melasti Beach — the one people fly to Bali for. It’s 4 minutes away by golf cart.
Four minutes — and you’re home. Not in a room. Home.
Evening comes. Time to head back. You get on the golf cart. Kids fall asleep on the way — rocked to sleep.
Your son builds a sandcastle. Daughter takes sunset photos on mom’s phone. You and your wife sit side by side, sipping coconuts and doing nothing. Just watching the sun drop below the horizon.
People drive across the entire island to get here. Sit in traffic, pay for parking, fight for a spot under an umbrella. You just sit down and drive over. Four minutes from your apartment.
Melasti. That beach. 7 million tourists a year. 11 million hashtags on Instagram. White sand, water like a Photoshopped picture — except it’s real. Gentle slope into the water — kids can splash around, no need to chase them.
After lunch you hop on the golf cart. Four minutes — and you’re there.
Stars, ocean, silence. No one around. You and your wife on your roof — not a shared terrace with neighbors
Kids are asleep. Finally.
That’s the difference between "bought a hotel room" and "own a place I want to return to."
And you realize — you can. This is your apartment. Want to rent it out and make money? Do that. Want to live here yourself? Do that.
She turns to you: "Hey, what if we come for a month next year?"
Your wife ordered a massage therapist through the app — she’ll arrive in half an hour, right here, on the roof. For now you’re lying on the sofa, looking up. Saying nothing. Just lying there together.
And the view. 180 degrees. Ocean from left to right. Stars above. So quiet you can hear distant waves.
27 square meters minimum. Some apartments — up to 60. Garden furniture, lounge chairs, BBQ area. All yours.
You go up to your rooftop. Not to a shared terrace packed with the whole hotel waving selfie sticks. To yours. Private.
Everything you just read — it’s not fantasy. Not a marketing image. It’s a normal day for an apartment owner in our complex.
We could have started this presentation with numbers. ROI, returns, annual percentages. But first we wanted you to feel — what all this is for.
That's why we designed this complex.
But when you’re sitting on your roof with your coffee looking at your ocean — you won’t be thinking about returns. You’ll be thinking: "I'm so glad I did this."
Because yes, the apartment makes money. Good money. More on that later.
Standard apart-hotels have 25 square meters. We have 37. The difference is in the number of guests — and your income.
Why this matters for income:
That’s what these 37 square meters give you
When was the last time this happened? In a hotel — never.
You finish your coffee. Wife comes out — sleepy, warm. Sits beside you. You’re silent together.
Fifteen minutes just for yourself. While everyone sleeps. While no one’s tugging, asking, needing.
Pool below. Ocean in the distance. Silence.
You get up quietly. Brew coffee on a real kitchen — not a corner with a kettle, but an actual stove. Grab your cup, step onto the balcony.
Six in the morning. You open your eyes. Wife beside you — still sleeping. Behind a closed door, in the living room, the kids are snoring. Not a sound.
  • Separate bedroom. Kitchen-living room with a proper sofa bed — a real one, not squeaky. Bathroom. Balcony.
  • Four people fit comfortably here. Family with two kids. Two girlfriends traveling together. Not crammed — actually comfortable.
  • A standard 25 sqm studio fits two, max. Here — four. Same "studio" category, but double the audience.
  • More guests who fit your apartment — higher occupancy. Higher occupancy — higher income.
  • 37 square meters isn’t a random number. It’s calculated.
At six in the morning you’d hear neighbors packing suitcases. And the kids would be sleeping on a cot one meter from you.
55 sqm. When a studio is too small. When a three-bedroom is too much.
Your son is fourteen. Remember what that’s like?
Who it's for:
Everyone under one roof. But everyone has space.
That’s what 55 meters and a second room are for.
Morning — two bathrooms. No one’s knocking on the door. No one’s waiting. Son gets ready at his pace. You at yours.
You and your wife are in the bedroom. Door closed. Silence. Herbal tea, candles, a conversation that doesn’t end with "quiet, the kid will hear."
Evening. Son is in the living room — sofa, TV, his territory. Watching whatever he wants, volume wherever he wants. Happy.
Now picture something different.
Evening: you and your wife want time alone. He wants to watch videos. Everyone’s irritating everyone. Vacation becomes an ordeal.
Headphones in. Phone in hand. TikTok, YouTube, texting friends. Answers questions in one syllable. Hugs — "come on, mom."
Now you’re on vacation. A studio. One room. Son on the sofa two meters from your bed.
  • Families with teenagers. When your kid is 12−14, sleeping in the same room with parents is no longer an option.
  • Two couples traveling together. Want to vacation together, but don’t want to hear each other through the wall. One pair in the bedroom, the other in the living room. Two bathrooms — no morning conflicts. Together, but with boundaries.
  • Studio — for young families with toddlers. Two-bedroom — for those who outgrew "everyone in one pile."
80 sqm. Arrived for a month. This isn’t a vacation anymore — it’s living. And you want to live in an apartment, not a room.
You told your mom: "Fly to Bali. We'll spend two weeks together."
What's inside:
Two weeks. Nobody bothered anyone. Everyone glad to be together.
That’s what 80 meters and three rooms are for.
Evening — together again. Dinner on the balcony — 14 square meters, table for six, sunset over the ocean.
Then — everyone goes their own way. Mom rests in her room. Wife at the spa. You work in the coworking space. Kids at the children’s center.
Three generations. One big table. Breakfast together.
Morning comes. You wake up. Walk into the kitchen. Mom’s already there — made porridge for the grandkids. Kids at the table. Wife comes out of your bedroom, sleepy, content.
No. Her room. Her space. She’s home — just right now home is in Bali.
She arrived. Seventy years old. Tired from the trip. You walk her to the guest bedroom.
Her own room. Her own bathroom. Her own door she can close. Not a sofa in the living room where she feels like "a guest" and wakes at six so she won’t disturb anyone.
  • Master bedroom — own bathroom, own space. Close the door — it’s you and your wife, that’s it.
  • Guest bedroom — a proper room, not a closet. You can put parents here. Or older kids. Comfortable, dignified.
  • Guest bathroom — three people get ready at the same time in the morning. No lines.
  • Big living room with kitchen and dining area. Space to cook. Space to gather.
  • Balcony 14 sqm — that’s a terrace. Breakfasts, dinners, evening tea with a view.
  • Big families. Those who bring grandparents. Those who come not for a week — for a month, for two.
  • When you arrive for a month — that’s not a vacation anymore. That’s life. And you want to live in an apartment, not a room.
Who it's for:
Three bedrooms, your own rooftop of 100 square meters, ocean view in every direction. Full VIP — and it’s still available.
You worked hard to get here.
What's inside:
Table is set. Chef cooking downstairs — seafood, Balinese cuisine. Waiter brings dishes up to the rooftop.
One hundred square meters. Jacuzzi in the corner. Lounge chairs along the edge. And the view.
On your roof — ten people. Business partners. Old friends. People you’ve been through fire with.
Saturday. Evening. Bali.
Now picture something different.
Apartment in your home city? Same as the neighbor’s. Car? In two years — an old model. Watch? Not everyone even notices.
Now the question: where does it show?
Twenty years. Sleepless nights. Deals that fell through. Deals that took off. People who let you down. People who believed.
You built. Risked. Endured. And you built something.
  • 210 square meters. Three bedrooms — each with its own bathroom. Living room the size of an apartment. Kitchen where you can host serious guests.
  • And the roof. 100 square meters of private rooftop. Table for ten, jacuzzi, lounge chairs. And still room left over.
  • No neighbors. Not "far away" — none at all. Highest point in the complex. Above you — only sky.
  • In the whole complex. There were two — one already sold.
  • Currently available. By the time you read this — maybe not.
  • If you’ve been thinking "someday I’ll buy something special" — this is it. And this is now.
There's one penthouse like this.
180 degrees of ocean. Left to right — all the way to the horizon. 150 meters above sea level. You can see for 90 kilometers.
Sun is setting. Everyone goes quiet. Just watching.
Your partner turns to you: "Listen… I stayed at Bulgari for three thousand a night. Their view is worse."
You nod. You know. You already checked.
Only Bulgari costs three thousand a night. And this — this is yours.
Your wife catches your eye from across the table. Smiles. She remembers how it all started. Rented apartment, loan for the first car, "let's hang in there one more year."
Now you’re sitting on your roof. Above the ocean. With people you love.
This is where it shows what you’ve achieved.
Wake up — dive in the pool. Or: wake up — drink coffee with an ocean view. Your choice. You can add an option to your apartment. Two to choose from.
Ground floor terrace — 15 sqm.
Private rooftop on the fourth floor — from 27 to 60+ sqm.
  • Your own roof. Ocean view. Lounge chairs, BBQ space. You can order a massage therapist right to your roof — she’ll come, set up her table, give you a Balinese massage under the stars.
  • And here’s the key: rooftops are designed so neighbors can’t see each other. At all. This was a specific request from wives — "we want to sunbathe, we don’t want staring eyes." We solved it. Complete privacy.
  • Bottom or top — depends on what matters more to you. Pool at your doorstep or sky above your head.
Direct pool access. Literally: open the door, three steps, dive in. No elevators, no corridors, no "need to get dressed and go down." Wake up at six while everyone’s sleeping — step out, swim in silence, come back. Wife didn’t even notice.
Design that gets millions of views. Furniture, appliances, linens. Everything included in the price.
You know how it usually goes? You buy an apartment — then suffer for six months. Designer, contractor, tiles, furniture from Jakarta, delivery takes two months, they brought the wrong thing, redo…
Keys on Monday — first guests on Tuesday. No waiting.
Linens, towels, curtains — even that’s already there.
Appliances work. Fridge, AC, washer, TV. Plug in — works.
Furniture in place. Bed, sofa, table, closets. Everything’s there.
Renovation done. That Instagram style — Scandinavian minimalism with Balinese accents. Guests see the photos, they want to book.
Get your keys — walk in and live. Or rent it out. Immediately.
Not here.
Why will people pay $ 150 a night? Let me show you.
You’ve seen the apartment. Understand how it works — kitchen, bedroom, balcony, rooftop. But an apartment by itself — that’s just walls. People don’t pay for walls.
Let me show you what exactly.
Because here there’s something no one else on Bali has.
Why will a family from Jakarta choose our complex over a villa around the corner? Why pay $ 150 a night instead of $ 80 at a guesthouse?
People pay for the place. The infrastructure. The feeling.
The complex name is a hint about who’ll be paying you money.
"Habbi" is Arabic. Affectionate form of "habibi." A woman calls a man this: "my love," "my dear."
Why an Arabic name for a complex in Bali?
That’s the moment we built everything for.
And that’s why these people will pay you $ 150 a night. Again and again.
She turns to him and says: "Habbi, thank you. This is the best vacation of my life."
Evening. She’s sitting on the rooftop, watching the sunset. Kids are asleep. Husband beside her.
They arrive. Wife sees an apartment with ocean view. A children’s center where she can drop the kids for a couple hours. Spa waiting for her massage. Women’s pool where she can swim without staring eyes. Restaurant where she doesn’t need to cook.
Then the husband says: "Pack your bags. We’re going to Bali. I arranged everything."
Picture this: Indonesian family. Husband — entrepreneur, works a lot. Wife is exhausted from daily routines. Two kids demanding attention 24/7. Haven’t had a real vacation in two years.
Because it’s a hint. Who our main audience is.
Why there’s not a single competitor on all of Bukit. And what that means for your income.
The whole complex is built around three ideas. And each one is about money.
Here — children’s center, 350 sqm. Drop off the kids with caregivers for three hours. Kids are happy — games, cartoons, new friends. Parents are happy — first peaceful dinner in six months.
Picture this: mom and dad want to have dinner alone. Romance, sunset, glass of wine. What about the kids? In a regular hotel — you bring them along. Or hire a babysitter for $ 50.
Family-Friendly.
Here — separate women’s pool. Separate women’s gym. She swims, sunbathes, does yoga. No one watching. For the first time this vacation — truly relaxed.
That evening she tells her husband: "Let's come back here next year."
Your guest’s wife is Muslim. She wants to swim. But in a regular pool — men, stares, uncomfortable. She stays in the room.
Privacy.
Spa 250 sqm — wife at a massage for two hours. Gym 350 sqm — husband lifted weights in the morning. Restaurant with healthy food — not a greasy burger, but fresh salad and grilled fish.
No alcohol. No nightclubs. After a week, they leave — feeling human again.
They came to rest. Not to get drunk at a bar — to recover.
Wellness.
Bali — their #1 destination.
Bukit — the most prestigious location on Bali.
And on all of Bukit — not a single complex with this infrastructure. Not one. Want a five-star hotel with privacy? $300-500 a night. Bulgari — $2,000.
Want a villa? Zero infrastructure, nowhere to put the kids.
Want cheap? Guesthouse for $ 40. No pool, no spa, no nothing.
A middle option — $ 140−180 a night, with everything included — didn’t exist.
Until us.
Guests have nowhere else to go. They either pay us $ 150, or pay three times more, or suffer.
Guess what a middle-class family chooses.
Indonesia — 270 million people. Largest Muslim country in the world.
Now — why this is money.
$ 150 a night. Here’s why they pay — and why they won’t leave for competitors.
Not for walls. For what happens inside.
Family woke up. Kids are hungry, whining. In a regular hotel — get dressed, find a cafe, haggle, wait for the order. Here — took the elevator down, sat at a table, eating in 10 minutes. Evening — same restaurant, but now candles, sunset, kids at the children’s center. Romance without effort.
Restaurant with ocean view.
Rooftop cafe.
Wife grabbed a smoothie, sat down with ocean view, took a photo. Posted to Instagram: "My morning in Bali." 500 likes, 30 comments "Where is this?!" She tags the location. Free advertising for your complex.
Three pools.
Sunday, 11 AM. Dad swims in the main pool. Mom in the women’s pool, no crowd of men around, relaxed for the first time in a year. Kids splash in the children’s pool — shallow, safe, no need to panic every second. Everyone resting. At the same time. In one complex.
Spa 250 sqm.
Mom hasn’t had a massage in two years. "No time, kids, life." Here — drops kids at the children’s center, goes to spa. Two hours of Balinese massage. Comes out — like she shed ten years. Or orders a therapist to the rooftop: lying under the stars, ocean sounds below, someone else’s hands kneading her back. That’s what they pay $ 150 a night for.
Children's center 350 sqm.
Not a room with three toys. A proper center. Caregivers, cameras, age-appropriate activities. Mom drops kids off for three hours — goes to spa. Dad — to the gym. For the first time this vacation, they got to be adults, not just parents. In the evening they pick up happy kids: "Mommy, it was so cool, can we go again tomorrow?!" For families with little ones — this is the reason to choose you.
Two gyms.
Husband is a gym guy. Needs to not skip workouts even on vacation. Two-floor gym, proper weights, not rusty dumbbells from a basement. Worked out — happy. Wife wants yoga but feels shy in a mixed gym. Women’s gym — she’s alone, no one watching. Both came back to the room in a good mood.
Coworking space.
IT guy from Singapore. Works remotely. Needs fast internet and a quiet spot for a few hours a day. Rest of the time — beach, sunset, life. These types don’t come for a week — they come for a month or two. Stable rental, no hassle with check-ins and check-outs every three days.
Conference hall for 80 people.
Company from Jakarta decided to hold a retreat. Booked the hall for two days + 25 apartments for staff. Full occupancy when others have dead season.
Security 24/7, cameras, gated territory.
A family with two kids won’t go somewhere where random people wander the halls. "Is it safe?" — mom’s first question when booking. Our answer: yes, it’s safe.
Every zone is a reason to come. A reason to stay longer. A reason to return next year.
And every return — money in your account.
Location: 5 minutes to a beach with 7 million tourists. They’re already here — they just need somewhere to stay.
Melasti Beach. Google it — you’ve definitely seen it. White sand, turquoise water, cliffs on both sides. That beach from Instagram.
From the complex to this beach — 4 minutes by golf cart. Sit down, drive, lay out your towel.
Families with kids especially love it — gentle slope, soft waves, kids can splash for hours.
11 million hashtags. 7 million visitors a year.
Now think like an investor.
7 million people come to this beach every year. Right here. Not somewhere on Bali — specifically here.
They need somewhere to sleep. Somewhere to have breakfast. Somewhere to leave the kids while they relax.
You don’t need to find them. They’re already here. Just give them a place to stay.
90% humidity. Salt in the air. AC dies within a year. Furniture swells. Electronics rust. Renovation every two years. Maintenance bills — through the roof.
One guy we know bought a villa right on the water. Sold it after three years at a 30% discount. Said: "I was tired of fixing things."

850 meters — the sweet spot. View is there. Beach is 4 minutes away. But humidity is 65−75%, like a normal city. Building will last decades.

Because first line looks beautiful in ads and is hell in reality.
Why 850 meters from the ocean, not on the first line?
View. From upper floors you can see the ocean for kilometers.
Breeze. Down below it’s stuffy, up here it’s fresh.
Safety. Remember the 2004 tsunami? At this elevation, waves physically can’t reach. For families with kids — this matters.
The complex sits on a hill. What does this give you?
130 meters above sea level.
Guest isn’t tired yet — and they’re already checking in. First impression — good.
Here’s what location does: tourist Googles "accommodation near Melasti" — finds your apartment. You do nothing. They find you themselves.
Landed, got in the car — 40 minutes later you’re there. No traffic, toll road.
40 minutes to the airport.
  • Best golf clubs — 15 minutes
  • GWK Park (Bali's main statue) — 10 minutes
  • Beach clubs — 15-20 minutes
  • Surf spots — 10 minutes
Morning — beach. Afternoon — golf. Evening — dinner at a club.
All without hours of driving.
Guests don’t want to sit in taxis for two hours for one attraction.
Everything nearby.
Here:
Lots of "DIY" construction on Bali. This isn’t one of them.
You've probably heard stories.
Because on Bali they build cheap and fast. No blueprints, no engineers, no proper materials. Pour concrete today — plaster tomorrow. Sell it in a year. What happens in five years — not their problem.
Why does this happen?
Beautiful renders. Promises. Money paid. Three years later — cracks in walls, leaks from ceiling, facade crumbling. Developer shrugs: "Well, it’s Bali, humidity…"
We do it differently.
Earthquake resistance up to 9 points. Bali is a seismic zone, earthquakes happen. Our building will survive them. Your guests will sleep soundly.
Japanese construction technology.
We make concrete on-site. Don’t wait for a mixer that sat in traffic for three hours and brought half-set slurry. Control quality of every batch. Ourselves.
Our own concrete plant.
1-year warranty on everything else.
Tap leaks — we fix it free. AC broke — we replace it. Tile fell off — we redo it. First year after handover — any problem is on us.
You’re buying an asset for 27 years. It needs to last 27 years. We guarantee it. Not with words — with a contract.
Foundation, walls, roof. If something goes wrong — our responsibility. Not yours.
10-year warranty on structure.
Every day of construction — on photo and video. Foundation, rebar, hidden utilities — all documented.
Want to see how we poured the foundation on May 14th? We’ll show you the video. Want to see how we did waterproofing? Here’s the folder from that day.
Almost no one on the market has this transparency.
Sika — world leader. Expensive. But tropical climate, rain, humidity — not a joke. One layer of waterproofing — not enough. Two — reliable. In 10 years your walls will be dry, not moldy.
Double-layer Sika waterproofing.
Archive of all work.
Why this isn’t "just another apart-hotel" — summary.
You’ve seen many offers. "Apartments in Bali, great returns, hurry up and buy." Sounds the same. Here's how this is different:
Women’s pool, women’s gym, private rooftops. For 270 million Indonesian Muslims — this isn’t optional, it’s a requirement. Nothing else like it exists. Anywhere.
Only complex on Bukit with Family + Privacy + Wellness concept.
Want spa, children’s center, three pools, restaurant — pay $ 300+ a night. Or suffer in a guesthouse for $ 40. Middle ground didn’t exist. Now it does. Only with us.
Only one in the $ 140−180 price range with full infrastructure
This isn’t "just another apart-hotel." This is a product for a specific audience that has nowhere else to go.
All of this you can see with your own eyes — 300+ renders, video tour, live construction cameras, floor plans of all types. Or come in person — we’ll meet you, show the site, let you touch the walls.
Guests have nowhere else to go. Either you, or three times the price, or much worse. Guess what they'll choose.
Niche with no competitors.
Won’t fall apart in five years. Will stand all 27 years of your leasehold — and another 30 after extension.
They’re already here. Don’t need to find them, advertise, attract. Just give them a place to stay.
Location — 5 minutes to a beach with 7 million tourists.
Quality — Japanese technology, 10-year warranty.
Now you know what you’re buying. All that’s left is to understand how much it brings.
You've seen the complex. The concept. The infrastructure. The location.
You understand why guests will pay $ 150 a night.
We found a way to achieve the highest ROI in this market segment. Higher than any competitor on the island.
How — I'll show you next. There will be specific math.
And here's where it gets interesting.
Now the main question: how much does this bring you? In dollars. In your pocket.
Usually Bali gives 8−10%. We give up to 20%. Let me show you why.
Usually apartments on Bali give 8−10% annual returns. If you’re lucky.
We give 10% to 20%. Depends on the market.
First — the math. Three scenarios: good, normal, and worst-case.
Even in the worst case, you’re in profit. You’ll see how in five minutes.
Why such a range? Different model. And one detail in the product that no one else on the island has. It can push your returns 4−5 percentage points higher. More on that later.
But even our 10% is more than a "good" result in Dubai. And twice what Europe offers.
$ 45 per person per night for guests. $ 26,000 a year net for you.
This is the optimal scenario. When everything goes well.
Where do the numbers come from?
$180 for four — that's $45 per person. For that money at a hotel you'd get a bed and minibar. Here — a whole apartment.
Hard to find guests? No.
80% occupancy. $52,560 gross revenue per year.
Minus Booking, Airbnb, management company, utilities, taxes.
Net to you: $26,000 per year.
ROI: 20% annually. Payback — 5 years.
But that's the best scenario. What if everything goes wrong?
With us — $180 for the apartment. Four people. Own kitchen, bedroom, kids sleep separately. Pools, spa, beach five minutes away.
Family of four wants to go to Bali. Dad, mom, two kids. In a regular hotel they need two rooms — $ 300−400 a night. Or Bulgari from $ 1,200.
Without rose-colored glasses? $ 21,000 a year. ROI 17%. This is the baseline.
Let’s come down to earth. No optimism — just average market numbers.
Occupancy: 77%. Average rate: $146 per night.
Average — $146.
Gross income: $ 41,000 per year.
Minus all expenses.
Net to you: $21,000 per year.
ROI: 17% annually. Payback — 6 years.
This is "normal." This is the baseline we're counting on.
For comparison: 17% in dollars is twice a "great" result in Dubai. And four times what renting out an apartment in your home city brings.
But let's say even this doesn't work. What then?
$ 146 is the yearly average. In December-January the rate shoots to $ 200. In June-July — when Australians escape their winter — also around $ 200. Other months — $ 110−130.
We didn’t make this up. This is data from a management company with 15 years in the Asian market. People who launched Ritz-Carlton in Asia. They know what they’re talking about.
Crisis, borders closed, no tourists. ROI: 10%. Still more than Dubai.
Remember 2020? Borders closed. Zero tourists. Hotels stood empty. Property owners worldwide were grabbing their heads.
Let's imagine that happens again.
Twenty-six dollars.
For that money in Kuta you’d get a bunk in a hostel with shared bathroom. Here — an apartment with kitchen, pools, spa, children’s center, Melasti Beach five minutes away.
Think anyone from those 7 million people who visit Melasti every year would pay $ 26 a night?
Millions would. Literally.
But let’s say even then occupancy barely hits 73%. Everything went wrong. Worst case.
What do you get?
$12,000 per year net. ROI: 10%.
Now compare.
Your friend bought an apartment in Dubai. Everything’s fine, no crisis. He gets 6−7% — and considers himself lucky.
Another acquaintance rents out an apartment in Europe. 4-5% if lucky.
Someone invested back home. 4-5% in a currency that shrinks every year.
And you — in the worst-case scenario, when everything fell apart — get 10% in dollars.
Our failure beats their success.
Rate drops to $104 a night. For four people — that's $26 each.
Crisis. No foreign tourists. Only Indonesians. Competitors panicking — slashing prices. We’re forced to cut too just to get anyone to check in.
Get it? We removed the main problem of all apart-hotels.
What does this give you?
  • We can charge $ 180 a night — and for a family it’s still half the price of two regular hotel rooms. Everyone’s happy: they save, we earn.
  • And if the market dips — we can slash to $ 104 a night. $ 26 per person. Hostel prices for an apartment with five-star hotel infrastructure.
  • Competitors can’t do this. Their rooms are for two. Cut the price — lose the margin. Our unit is for four. Cut the price — still fill up, still profitable.
Plus:
  • Location. 5 minutes to a beach with 7 million visitors a year. Tourists are already here.
  • No seasonality. 365 days — warm, sunny, ocean. No dead months.
  • Concept. Family-friendly, wellness, privacy. Only such complex on Bali.
All together — a safety cushion. Market dipped? Cut the price and still fill up. Because $ 26 per person for this infrastructure is a gift.
But there’s something else. That thing I mentioned at the start. It can push your ROI even higher. More on that soon.
A standard apart-hotel is designed for two people. Bed, nightstands, minibar — that’s it. Family arrives — they need two rooms. Or a cot no one actually sleeps on.
We did it differently.
37 square meters instead of 25. Separate bedroom. Proper sofa bed in the living room. Kitchen where you can actually cook, not just boil water.
Family of four lives just as comfortably as a couple.
And pays for one unit, not two.
10%, 17%, 20%. Pick what you believe — you’ll make money either way.
Three scenarios. Three numbers. Simple.
Worst case — everything fell apart:
  • Occupancy: 73%
  • Rate: $104 per night
  • Net to you: $12,000 per year
  • ROI: 10%
Standard case — everything on track:
  • Occupancy: 77%
  • Rate: $146 per night
  • Net to you: $21,000 per year
  • ROI: 17%
Optimal case — everything went well:
  • Occupancy: 80%
  • Rate: $180 per night
  • Net to you: $26,000 per year
  • ROI: 20%
Pick what you believe — your choice.
But here’s what matters: even if you’re a pessimist and only believe in the worst case — you’re still getting 10% annual returns in dollars. Without lifting a finger. Money just hits your account.
Now let’s look at the big picture. What do these numbers mean over 27 years?
27 years — $567,000.
Even worst case — $324,000.
Leasehold is 30 years. First 3 years — construction. That leaves 27 years of rental.
Let's do the math.
Standard scenario:
$21,000 × 27 = $567,000
Optimal scenario:
$12,000 × 27 = $324,000
Half a million dollars is "normal." Seven hundred thousand — if things go well. Three hundred twenty — if everything goes wrong.
And this doesn’t account for rate increases. Rates on Bali grow 3−7% annually. Land isn’t getting bigger. Tourists keep coming.
Realistically — closer to $ 700,000−800,000 from one apartment over the full term.
Think about it: even in the worst case — three hundred thousand dollars. Just hitting your account. For 27 years straight.
Now you understand why we say these apartments are money-generating machines?
All that’s left is to learn what it costs and how to buy.
Worst case:
$26,000 × 27 = $702,000
"Okay, how much?" — Here's the answer.
17−20% annual returns. Payback in 5−6 years. Even worst case — 10% in dollars. How much does this cost?
From $130,000 turnkey.
But here’s what’s important: you don’t need $ 130,000 right now.
To enter — $1,300 is enough. That's the deposit. Refundable.
To start — $26,000. That's the first payment.
The rest — installments over 18 months. Zero interest. No banks. Pay in parts while your apartment is being built.
Sounds complicated? Actually, six simple steps. Let me show you.
$ 130,000 — base studio 37 sqm.
$ 180,000 — two-bedroom 55 sqm.
$ 230,000 — three-bedroom 80 sqm.
Penthouse — one, price separate.
Not bare walls. Ready apartment. Open the door — everything’s there. Bed made, towels in the bathroom, coffee machine in the kitchen. Want to move in yourself? Do it. Want to host your first guests? Do it.
"Never bought abroad. Is it complicated?" — Six steps. No flying required.
Tons of paperwork. Confusing laws. Fear of getting scammed.
That's what everyone thinks when first looking at foreign real estate.
Actually, it's simpler. Six steps. Don't need to fly anywhere. Everything remote.
Step 1: Application — 30 seconds
Write: "Interested in an apartment in Bali." WhatsApp, Telegram, website form — whatever’s convenient.
Within 24 hours a manager will contact you. Show you floor plans, available units, views. Answer questions. No pressure.
Step 2: Choose your apartment
Want maximum income? Plan to visit with family sometimes? Want to invest minimum and see how it goes?
Tell the manager — they’ll find options for your goals.
Step 3: Deposit — $1,300, refundable
Chose an apartment — put down 1%. For a $130,000 studio that's $1,300. Apartment is taken off the market for 21 days. You receive full document package: contract, due diligence, building permit, land papers. 21 days to review. Lawyers, partners, your most paranoid friend — whoever you want. Don't like it? Even just changed your mind? Get your money back. Done.
Step 4: Deal — one call
Everything checked out, everything's fine. First payment: 20% — $26,000.
Morning: you make the transfer. Daytime: Zoom call with you, manager, notary. Sign documents. 30 minutes.
You're in Dubai, Berlin, Sydney — doesn't matter. Internet works — deal works.
Week later, courier brings original contract with stamps. Done. You own an apartment in Bali. Without a single flight.
Step 5: Installments — 18 months, 0%
From here — no stress. Five payments of 10%.
$13,000 per quarter. Comfortable rhythm. Want smaller?
Can split into months — roughly $4,300.
Discuss with manager Zero interest.
No banks. No overpayment.
Step 6: Keys — final payment
18 months pass. Complex is ready.
You come — or watch via video call. See your apartment. Not renders — real walls, real view. Only then the final payment: 29% — $37,700. Why this way? You pay the main part when you see the finished product. We're motivated to finish on time. Interests aligned.
"Money's in crypto. Or Emirates. Or Europe. How do I pay?" — Every method works.
Living in Emirates? Money in a European bank? Capital in crypto?
Doesn't matter. We accept everything:
SWIFT-перевод —
from anywhere in the world. Account at OCBC Bank Singapore — one of Asia’s largest banks.
Криптовалюта (USDT) —
officially, legally, directly to company account. No need to convert to fiat.
Карты —
regular and credit. Relevant for UAE, Saudi Arabia residents.
Наличные в рупиях —
if you're in Bali and that's easier.
14 валют —
However you want to pay — we’ll find a way.
bank accepts payments in 14 currencies. No conversion hassle.
Your deal is your business. No registries, no leaks.
Bali has no public property registries. No one can "look up" online that you bought an apartment.
Information stays between you, us, and the notary. Notary is silent by law. We’re silent by contract.
Your name, amount, terms — all inside the deal. Nothing goes outside.
Need to buy through a company? We’ll arrange it. Discuss with manager.
You bought — and no one knows until you decide to tell them.
The full payment picture. One screen. Zero surprises.
Apartment $ 130,000. Here’s how it looks:
No hidden fees. No "oh and also this." You know exactly — when and how much.
You've seen the numbers. Now let's deal with the stuff keeping you up at night.
Australians are practical investors. You've done well by being skeptical. That healthy suspicion is why you still have capital to deploy.
But there's a difference between due diligence and paralysis. Let's put every concern on the table and sort through them.
"IT'S LEASEHOLD, NOT FREEHOLD — THAT'S NOT REAL OWNERSHIP"
This is the big one for Aussies. You grew up thinking freehold = ownership, leasehold = renting.
Let's unpack that.
What "freehold" gets you in Australia:
  • Own the land forever
  • Pay council rates forever
  • Pay land tax forever
  • Get 2-3% yield forever
  • Hope for capital growth that may or may not happen
What leasehold gets you in Bali:
  • 30-year Hak Pakai, renewable for 30 more (60 years total)
  • No annual property tax
  • No land tax
  • 10-20% yield
  • Your name on the certificate
  • Can sell anytime
  • Can pass to your kids
What's better — owning 2% returns forever, or owning 15% returns for 60 years?
Let me do the math:
Australian freehold, 30 years: $800K property × 2.5% yield = $20K/year × 30 = $600K total income (gross, before costs you're negative most years)
Bali leasehold, 30 years: $130K property × 15% yield = $19.5K/year × 30 = $585K total income (net, after costs you're keeping this)
Here's the honest question:
And after 30 years?
Or sell at year 25 when there's still 35 years on the lease. Plenty of buyers want properties with remaining terms.
"But what if Indonesia changes the law?"
Similar total income. But you invested $130K instead of $800K. Your capital efficiency is 6x higher.
You extend for another 30. Pay roughly $45K (about two years of rental income). Continue for another three decades.
More importantly: Indonesia WANTS foreign investment. They just created Golden Visa and Second Home Visa programs to attract more of it. They're not about to screw the people they're trying to attract.
The leasehold fear is emotional, not logical. It comes from Australian cultural programming. The math doesn't support it.
They've had these structures since the 1990s. Thousands of foreign investors rely on them. Changing the law would create a diplomatic incident with every major nation.
"I CAN’T GET A LOAN FROM AN AUSTRALIAN BANK"
True. Australian banks won't lend against foreign property.
And Indonesian banks don't lend to foreigners.
So you need capital upfront.
But here's why that's actually better:
No debt = no risk of negative equity.
Australian investors are leveraged to the eyeballs. When rates rose, cash flow went negative. Some are trapped in properties they can't afford to keep or sell.
Positive cash flow from day one.
Australian investment property: typically negative geared, losing $10-20K/year, hoping capital growth bails you out.
Bali property: positive $15-25K/year from the first quarter. No hoping required.
Lower total capital required.
Your Bali apartment? No mortgage. No interest payments. No rate risk. Every dollar of rental income is yours.
For what you'd put as a deposit on a Sydney apartment, you can own a Bali apartment outright.
  • $1,300 deposit (refundable)
  • $26,000 first payment
  • 5 quarterly payments of $13,000 over 18 months
  • Final payment: $37,700 (but 9% is covered by apartment's rental income)
You're not writing one cheque for $200K. You're spreading it over 18 months. Most Aussie investors pay from savings as they go.
Yes, you need the full amount upfront. But the full amount is $130-200K AUD, not $800K+.
And here's our payment structure:
"HOW DO I MANAGE IT FROM SYDNEY?"
6,000 kilometers. Different country. Different language.
What happens when the AC breaks at 2am?
Answer: someone else fixes it. Not you.
Here's exactly how it works:
Professional management company handles everything:
  • Bookings (Airbnb, Booking.com, direct channels, corporate rentals)
  • Guest communication (check-in, issues, requests)
  • Housekeeping (cleaning between guests, linen changes)
  • Maintenance (AC repair, plumbing, electrical, pool)
  • Bill payments (electricity, water, internet, everything)
  • Tax compliance (Indonesian tax filings)
  • Dynamic pricing (rates up in peak season, competitive in low)
  • Check your bank account quarterly
  • Read a one-page summary if you want
  • That's literally it
Who are these people?
Not some random Balinese guy with a clipboard. This is the team that launched Ritz-Carlton properties across Asia. 15 years in hospitality. Currently managing 20,000+ square meters on Bali.
They take a percentage of revenue — not a flat fee.
What do you do?
Their income depends on YOUR income. So they have every reason to keep your apartment booked, maintained, and getting five-star reviews.
  • Flat 7-8% fee whether occupied or not
  • Three-month vacancy? Still paying the fee
  • Maintenance? "We'll get someone out next week"
  • Tenant trashed the place? "Sorry, bond didn't cover it"
Aussie investors who've used both tell us Bali management is better. Higher service, aligned incentives, fewer headaches.
Can I visit and check?
Of course. It's your apartment. Come whenever you want. Fly over for a week, stay in your own place, see it working. Most owners do this once a year — combines an investment check with a holiday.
Can I use it myself?
Yes. Block out dates through the management app. Stay for free (you still pay cleaning costs). Most owners use it 2-4 weeks per year.
You make $21,000 → they make their cut from that
You make $12,000 → they make their cut from that
Compare to Australian property management:
"WHAT IF THE BUILDER DOES A RUNNER?"
Every Australian has heard a Bali horror story. Mate's cousin's friend put money into a villa, builder disappeared, money gone.
It happens. There are dodgy operators in Bali. Just like there are dodgy builders in Australia (ask anyone who's dealt with Metricon lately).
Here's why we're different:
Track record you can verify:
  • 18 years in development
  • 1.2 million square meters delivered (that's 170 MCGs)
  • 20,000 sqm currently operating on Bali
  • AWA Invest Awards: "Best Concept on Bali" 2023
  • Land: $1+ million (paid)
  • Construction to date: $3.8 million (spent)
  • Foundation: poured and cured
  • Walls: going up
You're still thinking. We're already building. With our capital at risk.
Out of 115 units, we're keeping 10. Our families will stay there. We'll rent them out. We're literally neighbors with our investors.
Why would we live in our own scam?
Our money is already in the ground:
Every concern you have — we put a penalty clause in the contract.
  • Live construction cameras (watch 24/7 from your laptop in Sydney)
  • Monthly video updates (emailed to you)
  • Existing investor references (we'll connect you directly)
  • Site visit (fly over, we'll meet you, show everything)
Our promise: if you visit and aren't 100% convinced this is legitimate, we'll cover your flights and accommodation. Full stop.
57 people have verified. Zero found problems. Zero said "scam." Zero asked for their money back.
Contractual protection:
Late delivery? 1% discount per month. Automatically. No arguing.
Something breaks? 10-year warranty on structure, 1-year on everything else.
Want out? You can sell anytime. We'll help find buyers.
This isn't a handshake deal over beers. It's a notarized contract under Indonesian law with specific penalties for non-performance.
Verification:
"THE YIELDS SOUND TOO GOOD — WHAT'S THE CATCH?"
10-20% when Australia offers 2-4%? Sus as.
Your skepticism is correct. It SHOULD sound too good.
Here's why the numbers are real:
Lower purchase price.
$130,000 USD in Bali buys a finished apartment with pools, spa, and ocean proximity.
You’re comparing different markets with completely different entry points.
Higher rent relative to price.
Tourists pay $150-180 USD per night. That's $4,500-5,400/month in high season.
For a Sydney apartment worth 6x more, you'd get $3,000/month — from a long-term tenant who might stop paying.
$130,000 USD in Sydney buys... nothing. A deposit, maybe.
Australia: council rates, water rates, land tax, strata levies — $8,000-15,000/year before you see a dollar of rent.
Bali rental market: 77%+ occupancy, 12 months a year. Aussies come June-August. Europeans come December-February. Asians come year-round. Indonesian domestic tourists fill every gap.
It's not "too good to be true." It's "different market, different economics."
What's the actual risk?
Worst case scenario: crisis, borders close, tourism collapses.
  • We drop rates to $104/night ($26/person — backpacker prices)
  • Occupancy falls to 73%
  • You still get 10% returns
10% is our FLOOR. It's Australia's CEILING.
No property tax.
Bali: operating costs only. No government taking a cut just for owning.
No dead season.
Sydney rental market: relatively stable but low yield.
"WHAT ABOUT TAX? DOES THE ATO COME AFTER ME?"
Aussie investors think about tax. A lot. You're trained to.
Here's how it works:
Indonesian side:
  • Rental income taxed at 10% (withheld by management company)
  • No annual property tax
  • No capital gains tax if sold after certain period
Australian side:
In practice:
  • Indonesian 10% tax: deducted automatically
  • Australian tax: declare the income, claim the foreign tax credit
  • Net effect: you pay your marginal rate on the income, minus what Indonesia took
Your accountant handles this. It's not complicated. Thousands of Aussies with overseas investments do it every year.
Do I need a special structure?
  • Foreign rental income IS assessable in Australia
  • BUT: you get credit for Indonesian tax already paid
  • AND: Australia has Double Taxation Agreement with Indonesia (no double-dipping)
For multiple properties or larger investments: consider PT PMA (foreign-owned company). Discuss with your accountant.
For a single apartment: usually not. Direct ownership under Hak Pakai works fine.
We can connect you with Australian accountants who specialize in Indonesian property. They'll tell you exactly what applies to your situation.
$ 10,800 in gifts. Why are we even doing this?
You’re probably asking: "If everything’s so great — why give bonuses? Why not just sell?"
Fair question. If it's all so good — why gifts?
Honest answer: it's profitable for us to sell faster.
Two construction phases. Sell remaining units now — launch both in parallel. Save six months. For us that’s $ 1.7−2 million in additional income.
You get gifts. We get speed. Everyone wins.
Now — what exactly you get.
Market value of this vacation: $3,000 minimum.
For you: $0. Included in package.
Picture this: a year passed. Complex opened. You get a message: "Your apartment is ready. When are you flying?"
You book tickets. Wife takes time off. Kids stay with grandma — or fly with you, your choice.
14 days in Bali. Not on your dime — on ours.
You wake up in your apartment. The one you saw in renders a year ago. Only now it’s real. Walls you can touch. View from window — not a picture, but actual ocean.
Go down to breakfast. Don’t pay — it’s included. Order whatever you want.
Evening — romantic dinner. Table by the pool, candles, sunset. Wife across from you. She’s relaxed — for the first time in a year. Because tomorrow’s not work. Neither is the day after.
Third day she goes to spa. Two hours of massage. Comes out — you don’t recognize her. She’s smiling. She’s rested. For real.
Meanwhile you’re walking around the complex. Seeing how everything works. Watching guests — they’re paying $ 150 a night. For the same thing you’re getting free.
And you realize: this is mine. I bought this. And it works.
Two weeks — and you come home a different person. Rested. Confident. Knowing your asset in Bali isn’t a picture in a folder, but a real place where you’re welcome.
BONUS 1 — 14-DAY TRIP: Two weeks in Bali for two. Accommodation, breakfast, spa — all included.
BONUS 2 — VIP TRANSFER: VIP transfer with police escort. Your friends will rewatch this video for years.
Ever seen how they meet sheikhs?
I have. On Bali it’s common — wealthy Arabs fly in with families, they’re met with sirens and flashing lights. Police car in front, everyone parts, not a single red light.
Now imagine: you walk out of the terminal. 10 hours on a plane. Tired, shirt wrinkled, want a shower and bed.
And there — car with flashing lights. Waiting for you.
Driver in suit opens the door. You get in. Police escort ahead. Sirens on.
Cost of this transfer: $2,000. Round trip.
For you: $0. Included in package.
Next 40 minutes you drive through Bali while all other traffic pulls to the side. No jams. No waiting. Everyone looks at your car thinking: "Who is that?"
Wife pulls out her phone and films. Kids are glued to the windows — for them it’s like a movie, only real.
You sit in the back seat and feel… well, you know. Feel like the person you’ve worked all these years to become. Someone who’s met with an escort.
Departure day — same thing. From complex to airport. With flashers. Sirens.
You’ll be showing this video to friends for the next ten years. "This is how they met us in Bali." Their jaws will drop.
BONUS 3 — SHEIKH'S GUIDE TOUR: Two days with the personal guide of Atlantis Dubai's owner. He'll show you Bali tourists never see.
Rich people have a secret. They don’t take tours with crowds. They have "their people" in every country.
In Bali, that person is the guide hired by Atlantis Dubai hotel owner. Every year. For a whole week.
Not a tour company. Not an agency. One specific person who’s lived on the island 20 years and knows it better than Google Maps.
Why does a billionaire pay one guide more than a five-star tour costs? Because this person shows a different Bali.
Waterfall in the jungle. You stand under the stream — no one around. Not a single tourist. Just you, your wife, and the sound of water.
Cost: $4,000. That's what Atlantis owner pays for a week. You get two days free.
For you: $0. Included in package.
Temple that’s not in guidebooks. Attendants watch calmly — they’re used to this guide. He belongs. Which means so do you.
Village where they plant rice the same way they did 200 years ago. Old man in a straw hat shows how the terraces work. Your son watches with mouth open — he’s only seen this in textbooks.
Restaurant on a cliff. Five tables. Reservations a month out. But the guide knows the owner — you’ll be served.
Spot where the sunset looks so good you want to stay silent. You sit with your wife, sun drops into ocean, and you understand: this is exactly why people keep coming back to Bali. Not for beaches with loungers. For this.
Two full days. He drives — you’re in the back seat. No buses, flags, "look to your right." Just you, your family, and an island tourists never see. After this tour, regular excursions will feel like kindergarten.
Golf at Indonesia's best course — $400
Know where million-dollar deals close? Not in conference rooms. On golf courses. Between the 9th and 18th hole.
4 hours on the country’s #1 course. Not marketing exaggeration — official ranking. 15 minutes from complex. Views that make you forget the score.
Never played? They’ll give you an instructor. After your first game you’ll understand why billionaires love golf. Already play? Then you know what a good course is. This is it.
Medical insurance for two — $ 300
Vacation should be vacation. Not Googling "doctor Bali urgent." Not wondering "what if something happens."
Full coverage for you and your companion. Whole vacation period. Cold, food poisoning, surfing injury — all covered. Doctors, medicine, hospitalization, evacuation if needed.
You just rest. If something happens — you’re protected. But better if you never need it.
Surfing or spa — your choice — $ 400
You decide what kind of vacationer you are.
  • Option A: Two surf lessons. Bali is the world capital. Being here without standing on a board is like being in Paris without seeing the Eiffel Tower. Instructor gets beginners up every day. After second lesson you’ll catch a wave. You’ll never forget that feeling.
  • Option B: Spa day. Three-four hours at the island's best salon. Massage, scrubs, wraps. You'll come out a different person.
Active or relaxed — you choose.
Professional video shoot — $ 700
Everything I described — transfer with sirens, tour to hidden spots, first wave on a surfboard — we’ll film it.
Not on a phone. Professional camera, good sound, editing.
You’ll get a finished film of your vacation. Show friends — let them be jealous. Post on social media — watch them ask "where is this?!" Watch in five years — and feel that wind, those waves, that road with sirens again.
Memory for life. In quality you won’t be ashamed to show.
$10,800 in gifts. For a decision you were going to make anyway.
  • 14-day trip for two: $3,000, VIP transfer with escort (round trip): $2,000
  • Two days with sheikh's guide: $4,000
  • Golf at best course in country: $400
  • Medical insurance: $300
  • Surfing or spa: $400
  • Professional video shoot: $700
Total: $10,800
This isn't a discount you'll forget in a week. These are experiences that stay for life. Video you'll show friends. Story you'll tell your kids. And all of it — just because you made the decision now, not six months from now.
Let's count what you're getting:
You can give it away.
For mom’s birthday — not a vase or an envelope. Two weeks in Bali with escort transfer.
For friends' wedding — a honeymoon they'll remember forever.
For a partner as thanks — not another gift set, but a sheikh-level vacation.
People remember this forever. And remember who gave it.
$10,800 in gifts.
Deadline — March 1, 2026. After that — terms change.
Don't want to go yourself? Give it as a gift.
Two things that turn "interesting" into "where do I sign."
You’ve seen the apartments. Complex. Numbers. Price. Risks covered. $ 10,800 in bonuses. Good investment? Yes. But I haven’t told you the main thing yet.
The first explains why our worst case beats everyone else’s best. The second shows how the apartment covers part of payments itself — from money it already earned. Ready?
Two things that turn "good" into "where do I sign?"
Here's the first.
First feature: the "boost" button. Why we profit when competitors go negative.
Picture a typical apart-hotel on Bali. Room for two. Bed, nightstand, kettle in corner. That's it.
Family from Jakarta arrives — dad, mom, two kids.
What do they do?
  • Option A: Two rooms. $240-300 a night. Expensive.
  • Option B: Squeeze four into a room for two.
Kids on a squeaky cot. No one sleeps well. Vacation ruined.
Now picture our apartment.
37 square meters. Separate bedroom — parents behind a closed door. In living room — proper sofa bed where kids actually sleep well. Kitchen where mom makes porridge in the morning instead of hunting for breakfast.
Same family. But now they need one apartment, not two rooms.
What does this mean for you as an investor?
December. High season. Management company sets $180/night.
For family of four — that’s $ 45 per person. Neighboring hotel they’d pay $ 240 for two rooms. With us — $ 180 for everyone. They save $ 60 a night and live three times more comfortably.
They're happy. You earn $180.
Now picture a crisis.
2020 repeated. Borders closed. Few tourists. Competitors panic-slash prices.
What does management company do? Drops rate to $104/night.
$104 for four — that's $26 per person.
Twenty-six dollars. For an apartment with kitchen, three pools, spa, children’s center. Five minutes from a beach with 7 million visitors a year.
Hostel bed prices. For five-star hotel conditions.
Think there'll be takers? Millions of them. Literally.
And here’s the key: you’re still in profit.
Because four pay, not two. Income from one apartment — like from two standard rooms.
Competitors can’t do this. Their room is for two. Cut price — go negative. We cut price — still fill up, still profit.
This is the "boost button." Flexibility no one else on the island has.
Who presses this button?
Not you. You don't need to watch the market, change prices, find guests.
Management company does.
Not students moonlighting. Professionals:
  • 15+ years in Asian market
  • Launched Ritz-Carlton and Kempinski in Asia
  • Already managing 20,000+ sqm on Bali
  • Know every hotel within 10 kilometers, every competitor, every seasonal pattern
High season — raise rate, maximize earnings. Low season — lower rate, still fill up. Crisis — slash to $26 per person and still come out ahead.
And here’s what matters: they get percentage of income. Not fixed fee — percentage.
You earn a lot — they earn a lot. You earn little — they earn little. Their interests align with yours 100%.
You just get a quarterly report: "Here's what we earned, here’s your share, here’s the transfer."
One of our investors — Ahmed from Dubai — said: "I haven't thought about this apartment in three years. Just see money in my account every quarter. It's like a salary, only I don't work."
That’s what boost button + professional management gives you.
Let's clarify one thing.
This isn’t a business you’re buying. Not a franchise where you need to "put in a little work at the start." Not a rental business where you find tenants and fix toilets yourself.
This is passive income. Real. No asterisks or fine print.
  • Find guests — management company promotes apartment through Booking, Airbnb, agency networks. They know how to fill it.
  • Talk to guests — "Where are towels?", "AC doesn’t work", "Neighbors are loud." All that — not your problems. Management company handles it.
  • Fix, clean, monitor — tap broke, bulb burned out, need cleaning after guests. You won't even know about it. It just gets done.
  • Deal with taxes — management company calculates, reports, pays. You get the net amount.
  • Think about it at all — you can forget you own an apartment in Bali. Remember when transfer notification comes.
17−22% annual returns. And for this you need to do nothing. Literally nothing.
You don't need to:
  • Once a quarter receive a report. How many nights rented, at what rate, what expenses, how much accrued.
  • And money to your account.
  • That's it.
  • Want to study every line — study. Want to just check balance once a quarter — do that. $5,250 arrived? Great. Close the app, live your life.
  • This isn't work. This is an asset that works for you.
What you do:
Second feature: your apartment covers the last payments itself. From money it already earned.
Here's the moment you'll say "wait, what?!"
Remember the payment schedule? There was: 29% when you get keys. For $ 130,000 apartment — that’s $ 37,700.
Big amount at the end, right?
Now pay attention.
  • You don't pay $37,700. You pay $26,000.
  • The other $ 11,700? Your apartment pays. Itself. From money it already started earning.
How does this work?
You got keys. Complex opened. First guests checked in. Apartment started making money.
First quarter.
Feel what happened?
Apartment costs $130,000.
From your pocket you paid $118,300.
The rest it earned itself.
Imagine: you bought a car. And it pays its own loan. And still pays you extra every month.
Sounds like fantasy? This is reality. Our "9% pays itself" scheme.
"What about crisis? Few tourists?"
Fair question. Let's calculate worst case.
Crisis. Panic. Prices dropped to hostel level — $104/night.
Even then apartment brings $3,000 per quarter.
Payment — $2,925.
Enough. With $75 to spare.
Even in apocalypse — apartment handles it itself.
Why did we do this?
Marina from Berlin asked the same on a call. "What's the catch? Why give away 9%?"
Simple answer: because we're 100% confident in these numbers.
If we doubted even 1% — we’d never tie payments to income. That would be our risk, not yours.
But we don’t doubt. 15 years of market data. Management company that launched Ritz-Carlton. Location 5 minutes from beach with 7 million tourists.
We know the apartment will earn this money. So we’re telling you straight:
Last 9% — not your problem. Apartment will handle it. This isn't a marketing trick. This is our confidence, backed by money.
  • Monday morning. You're in Dubai, drinking coffee, checking email. Notification from management company: "Your Q1 income — $5,250."
  • Of that, $2,925 automatically went to remaining apartment payment.
  • $2,325 — to your account. Net. You did nothing.
Second quarter — same thing. $ 5,250 income, $ 2,925 to payment, $ 2,325 to you.
Third — same thing.
Fourth — same thing.
Year passed. Four payments of $2,925 = $11,700. Done.
You didn’t add a single penny from your pocket. Apartment paid for itself.
And in that same year you received $ 9,300 net. Just to your account.
Three investors, three stories:
  • Sergey from Sydney — IT guy, 42. Said: "I ran the numbers three times on my calculator. Didn't believe it. Then I realized — they're just so confident in the product they're willing to risk their own money. That's what convinced me."
  • Fatima from Dubai — entrepreneur's wife, three kids. Told her husband: "If they're willing to wait for their 9% until the apartment earns it — they know something others don't."
  • Mikhail from Prague — logistics company owner. Said: "In 20 years of business I’ve never seen a developer risk like this. They’re either geniuses or idiots. Looked at the numbers — geniuses."
  • 57 investors already entered this scheme. Not one regrets it.
$118,300 from your pocket. Rest earns itself.
But those were calculated from $130,000. Full apartment price.
Now you know the truth: from your pocket you pay $118,300. Rest the apartment earns itself.
Means ROI should be calculated from $118,300. Not $130,000.
Recalculating:
In the ROI section I showed numbers: 10% — 17% — 20%.
  • Worst case: was 10% → now 10.1%
  • Standard case: was 17% → now 17.7%
  • Optimal case: was 20% → now 22%
Same money coming out. But you invested less. So percentage is higher.
Math is simple. Result is pleasant.
Our worst case is their best. Compare yourself.
Let's put it next to other options where you could put $118,000.
What does 10.1% — 17.7% — 22% mean?
Look at the "worst case" column.
  • Crypto: minus 80%. Invested $ 118,000 — left with $ 23,600. A friend from Dubai lost $ 400,000 like that in one night in 2022. Still hasn’t recovered.
  • Stocks: minus 30%. Third of money evaporated. Supposedly "reliable" companies — but portfolio dropped and won't recover for years.
  • Home city apartment: on paper positive, in reality minus 10%. Because currency devalued. Getting 5% in money that shrinks every year.
  • Dubai: 3-4%. Fine. But you saw our 10.1% in worst case?
And us? Even when everything went wrong — 10.1%. In dollars. Passively. Without your involvement.
Our failure is their success.
By the way, if your money's currently in crypto...
We accept USDT. Directly. Legally.
You can move in one day from an asset with -80% risk to an asset with +10% floor.
Same crypto going in. Only instead of roller coaster — stable income and real apartment in Bali you can touch with your hands.
One investor — Denis from Tallinn — did exactly that. Sold part of his crypto at the peak, bought an apartment. Said: "Finally sleeping well. Crypto can drop 90% — I don't care anymore. I have concrete in Bali that pays every quarter."
22% annual returns. And you'll sleep soundly. How is that possible?
Want high returns? Prepare for risk. Stocks, crypto — can make 50%, can lose 80%. Can’t sleep, checking prices in the bathroom.
Want safety? Forget about returns. Deposit, bonds — 3-5% a year. Sleep well, but inflation eats half.
Pick one.
But here?
That's how the investment world works.
  • Ceiling — high. 22% annual returns if things go well.
  • Floor — also high. 10.1% annually, even when everything's bad.
  • Spread — small. You won't wake up and discover you lost half. Even in crisis — you're in profit.
Why does this work?
  • Boost button: 4 people instead of 2. Can raise rate or slash it — either way we profit.
  • 9% pays itself: Your real investment is $118,300, not $130,000. Less invested — higher percentage.
  • Location: 5 minutes to beach with 7 million tourists. They're already here — don't need to find them.
  • Concept: Only family-friendly wellness complex at this level on Bukit. Zero competitors.
  • Management company: 15 years experience, Ritz-Carlton and Kempinski in portfolio. They know how to squeeze maximum.
We found a niche no one covers. And designed a product that works even in crisis.
Rare combination. Now you see it.
20 minutes. Your numbers. Your ROI. No obligations.
Leave a request. Manager in 20 minutes will:
  • Show available apartments with views and prices
  • Calculate your personal ROI across three scenarios
  • Answer questions spinning in your head
This isn't a sale. It's a conversation. You risk nothing — just get the numbers.
Then you decide yourself if $ 1,300 deposit is worth it to lock in a unit and get 21 days to review documents.
"Need to think?" Understood. But first look at what this decision costs.
Now your head is spinning: "Interesting. Need to think. Maybe I'll come back in a month."
Normal reaction. Big decisions aren't made in five minutes.
But here's what's important to understand: waiting is also a decision. And it has a cost.
Specific. In dollars.
You've seen the returns. 10.1% — 17.7% — 22%. Saw both features. Saw that even worst case you're in profit.
In three months the same apartment will cost $10,000-15,000 more.
$10,800 in bonuses will disappear.
"9% pays itself" scheme might close.
Total: $20,000-25,000.
That's how much "thinking for three months" costs.
This isn't a marketing trick. It's math. And now I'll show you where these numbers come from.
48 apartments. Not 480. Not 4,800. Forty-eight. And that number shrinks every week.
115 apartments. Period.
Land is bought. Permit is received. Project is approved. No more.
What's left right now:
As of this presentation:
This isn’t a residential complex in a big city, where the developer can add three more buildings if sales go well.
  • 48 apartments for sale
  • Of those with ocean view — about 10
  • Penthouse — one. There were two, one sold last week.
⚠️ These numbers may have changed. Check with manager for current count — might already be fewer.
What sells first?
View units. Obviously — at the same price everyone wants to wake up to ocean view, not a view of the neighboring building's roof.
Last week two view units sold. This week — one more.
Andrey from Almaty thought for three days. Choosing between two apartments on the 5th floor. Fourth day he called to book — one was already gone. Took the second. Said: "Good thing I didn't think for a week — would've lost both."
While you think — someone's buying.
Land on Bukit doubled in price in 2 years. And this is just the beginning.
Today — $3,600.
Doubled. Not in ten years. In two.
Why?
Land won't increase. Physically.
Two years ago, 100 sqm of land here cost $1,800.
Bukit is a peninsula. Cliffs, ocean, powerful tides. This isn't Dubai where sheikhs create islands. Not Singapore where they reclaim hectares from water.
Here what exists — exists. Forever.
No new complexes. Legally.
Indonesian government imposed construction moratorium. Infrastructure can't handle it — roads, electricity, water. New permits not being issued.
We squeezed in before the moratorium. Those who came after — waiting in line. For years.
More tourists every year. Statistically.
2024 — tourist flow exceeded pre-COVID levels. 7+ million foreigners. 9+ million Indonesians.
TripAdvisor has named Bali #1 destination in the world three years running. Not in Asia. In the world.
Same amount of land. Can’t build. More tourists. Demand grows, supply is frozen.
What happens to prices in this situation — no need to explain. In 2−3 months we close current phase and raise prices. $ 130,000 apartment becomes $ 140,000−145,000.
Same walls. Same view. Same ROI. Just $ 15,000 more expensive. $ 15,000 — that’s someone’s car. Someone’s family vacation. Someone’s emergency fund.
That money will just evaporate — because you decided to "think another month."
What do we get?
Deadline — March 1, 2026. Here's what disappears after it.
This is different. Let's be straight.
Right now half the complex is sold. Without advertising. Without targeting. Without influencers. Just partners, word of mouth, and presentations like this.
After the deadline we turn everything on.
Targeting Dubai, Europe, Australia. Million-follower influencers. Travel integrations. PR in business publications.
You've seen this a hundred times. "Last day of sale!" And tomorrow — new sale. Marketing circus.
Hundreds of thousands of people will learn about the project in a week. Some will want to buy.
And apartments — 48. When there's a line at the door — why would seller need bonuses?
What disappears:
Trip for two, escort transfer, sheikh's guide, golf, spa, video shoot. That's now. After deadline — maybe some of it. Probably nothing.
"9% pays itself" scheme.
We launched it for the first time. Experiment. If people buy without it — why keep it?
Current price.
$10,800 in bonuses.
$130,000 becomes $145,000. Same apartment. Just more expensive.
Right now you're at the point of maximum benefit:
  • Maximum choice (view units still available)
  • Minimum price ($130,000)
  • All bonuses ($10,800)
  • 9% scheme
You're like someone who walked into a restaurant an hour before opening. Empty hall, any table, chef cooks just for you.
In an hour — line, noise, "wait for an available table."
January 20th the door opens for everyone. And everything changes.
Bitcoin in 2015. Dubai in 2018. Tesla in 2019. Remember when you decided to wait?
You probably remember at least one moment like this.
Friend said: "Hey, there's this thing — Bitcoin. Costs $200. They say it'll grow."
You thought: "Interesting. But unclear. I'll wait."
Today Bitcoin — $100,000.
Or Dubai in 2018. Apartment for $150,000. "Expensive. I'll wait, maybe it'll drop."
Today same apartment — $400,000. And brings $25,000 a year.
Or Tesla at $50 per share. "Company is unprofitable. I'll wait for earnings report."
Today — $1,200. 24x growth.
Know what unites people who "decided to wait" back then?
They still regret it. Not because they lost money — they didn't lose anything.
They didn't earn. And that hurts more.
And those who didn't wait:
Sergey from Sydney saw the presentation in April. Three days later put down deposit. Said: "I missed Bitcoin, missed Dubai. Not being an idiot the third time."
Fatima from Dubai showed her husband in the evening, morning he called the manager. "Numbers add up. Why wait?"
Mikhail from Prague checked documents for two weeks. On day twenty said: "All clean. Taking two — for me and my son."
Oleg from Almaty hesitated for a month. Then found out the apartment he wanted sold. Took a different one — no ocean view. Still regrets waiting
57 people already bought. Not one said: "Wish I hadn't rushed." But several said: "Wish I'd bought earlier — better selection."
In five years someone will look at Bali prices and think:
"There was that presentation. $130,000 with installments. With bonuses. With the 9% scheme. I could have bought."
Will that be you?
Or will you be the one who bought — and now receives $21,000 a year while others regret?
Two options. No third.
Choose.
  • Enter at $130,000
  • Get $10,800 in bonuses
  • "9% pays itself" scheme works
  • Choose apartment with ocean view
  • Invest $118,300 from your pocket
  • Over 27 years receive $500,000-700,000
Option B: You wait
  • Price rises to $145,000-180,000
  • Bonuses disappear
  • 9% scheme closes
  • View apartments sell out
  • Or you just forget — and regret in two years
No third option.
Option A: You act now
  • Units — 48. Fewer every week.
  • Deadline — March 1, 2026. Deposit — $1,300.
  • Refundable. 21 days to review.
You risk nothing to try.
But could lose a lot if you don't try.
You read to the end. Means there's already a conversation happening inside.
Busy people don't read long presentations for fun.
If you're here — something resonated.
And right now two voices in your head.
First one says:
"Numbers add up. Risks covered. 17−22% in dollars — where else would I find that? Two features work. $ 10,800 in bonuses. Should buy."
Second one says:
Both are right. In their own way.
First sees opportunity. Second protects from mistakes.
Let's give the second one a say. Break down what's bothering it. Then you'll make a decision — whatever it is — calmly.
"Wait. This is $ 118,000. Big money. Need to think. Consult. Maybe in a month. Maybe something better comes up."
You're not buying square meters. Here's what you're really getting.
Tuesday morning. You’re drinking coffee, open your phone. Notification: "$ 5,250 deposited to account." You did nothing — just owned. This will happen 108 times over 27 years.
Protection from a world that's shaking.
Sanctions, freezes, devaluations — you’ve seen it. An apartment in Bali is an asset in different jurisdiction. Income in dollars. Whatever happens at home — you have a place to go. And money from there.
An inheritance that works for generations.
A machine that pays you every quarter.
Your son is ten now. When he's thirty-seven — apartment is still paying. He extends the leasehold for $45,000 and receives another $630,000 over the next 30 years. You're not spending money — you're building family wealth.
Three things. Passive income. Capital protection. Inheritance.
That's what you're buying. Not concrete.
Last doubts? Let's break them down.
"This is big money."
Yes. $118,000 is a serious amount.
But you're not giving away your last.
You're looking for where to put capital so it works. Question isn't "do I have money." Question is "where will it bring more with less risk."
Deposit gives 4-5%. Stocks can drop 30%. Crypto — 80%.
Here — 10% even in worst case. 17-22% normally. Answer is in front of you.
"Need to think."
Of course. But "think" isn't "put off for six months and forget."
Put down $1,300 deposit. Get 21 days and full document package. Show your lawyer, discuss with wife, give to your most paranoid friend.
That's "thinking." With unit locked in. Don't like it — get money back. Done.
"Want to come see it first."
Come. We'll meet you, show construction, area, documents.
But put down deposit before you come. Otherwise apartment you like might sell while you're flying. Deposit is refundable. Came, didn't like it — got money back and shook hands.
Two scenarios. One decision. Today.
You're on a terrace. Maybe home. Maybe Bali — in your apartment.
Phone vibrates. "$5,380 deposited to account. Habbi Bali — Q2 income."
You smile. This is the twentieth such transfer. Or twenty-fifth — you've stopped counting. Apartment paid for itself long ago. Every quarter now is just a gift.
Son asks: "Dad, is that the one you bought in 2025?" "That's the one. Best decision I made over a cup of coffee."
Scenario B:
You're scrolling your feed. Article: "Bali land tripled in price in 5 years."
Something clicks in your head. Bali. Apartments. There was a presentation...
You remember. $130,000. Installments. Bonuses. 9% scheme.
You decided to "think" then. Thought. Forgot.
And someone didn't forget. Someone now receives $21,000 a year from that apartment that could have been yours.
You close the article. Coffee tastes bitter for some reason.
Between these scenarios — one action.
Not "sign contract for $130,000."
Submit application. 30 seconds.
Manager will contact, show available units, answer questions.
Like it — put down $1,300 deposit. Get 21 days to review.
Don't like it — get money back. Shake hands. Part ways.
Risk — 30 seconds of your time.
Potential — $500,000+ over 27 years. And breakfasts on rooftop with ocean view.
Scenario A:
Deadline: March 1, 2026.
After — prices rise, bonuses disappear, 9% scheme closes.
View units left — ~10. Penthouse — one.
Now or regret later.
Close your eyes for a second.
Sunday, 2030.
P.S.
You read to the end. 95% of people closed at the middle. You didn't. That says more about you than any "investor mindset" test. One action left. 30 seconds. Button above.
P.P.S.
While you read this presentation, someone might have bought the apartment you were eyeing. This isn't manipulation — it's math. 48 units, hundreds of people see this offer. Two sold yesterday. One the day before. If you have a specific unit in mind — don't wait.
P.P.P.S.
In 27 years your son will say either "thanks, dad" — or "why didn't you buy back then?" Which conversation do you want?